Up to the challenge: C&D recycling is a major component of the U.S. EPA's Waste Wise Building Challenge Program.In July 2002, the U.S. EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid. EPA abbr. eicosapentaenoic acid EPA, n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic. EPA, n. awarded a grant to the Construction Materials Recycling recycling, the process of recovering and reusing waste products—from household use, manufacturing, agriculture, and business—and thereby reducing their burden on the environment. Association (CMRA CMRA Commercial Mail Receiving Agency CMRA Construction Materials Recycling Association CMRA Central Motorcycle Roadracing Association CMRA Capital Market Risk Advisors, Inc. ) to conduct a public education and training program to increase the reuse reuse - Using code developed for one application program in another application. Traditionally achieved using program libraries. Object-oriented programming offers reusability of code via its techniques of inheritance and genericity. and recycling of construction and demolition Demolition is the opposite of construction: the tearing-down of buildings and other structures. It contrasts with deconstruction, which is the taking down of a building while carefully preserving valuable elements for re-use. debris. The purpose of the $75,000 grant was to provide technical assistance to the public and private institutions, corporations and companies to hdp them implement C&D recycling. Under the program, participants were required to: * Join the Waste Wise Building Challenge Program. * Implement a corporate policy, local government ordinance A law, statute, or regulation enacted by a Municipal Corporation. An ordinance is a law passed by a municipal government. A municipality, such as a city, town, village, or borough, is a political subdivision of a state within which a municipal corporation has been or adopt best management practices for reusing and recycling C&D debris on eligible construction and demolition projects. * Incorporate reuse and recycling into construction or demolition documents, including contractor requirements and specifications. * Include contractor or subcontractor One who takes a portion of a contract from the principal contractor or from another subcontractor. When an individual or a company is involved in a large-scale project, a contractor is often hired to see that the work is done. training on best practices for reusing or recycling C&D debris. * Provide the CMRA and the EPA with C&D diversion A turning aside or altering of the natural course or route of a thing. The term is chiefly applied to the unauthorized change or alteration of a water course to the prejudice of a lower riparian, or to the unauthorized use of funds. data and project information to be included in a case study for the grant program. * Incorporate a sustainable design approach for the project that would include reused or salvaged materials, recycled content products and other sustainable design measures as applicable to the project scope. Participants in the grant program had to meet the following criteria: * Scope, size and budget for project. * Sufficient volume of C&D tonnage TONNAGE, mar. law. The capacity of a ship or vessel. 2. The act of congress of March 2, 1799, s. 64, 1 Story's L. U. S. 630, directs that to ascertain the tonnage of any ship or vessel, the surveyor, &c. that may be potentially diverted di·vert v. di·vert·ed, di·vert·ing, di·verts v.tr. 1. To turn aside from a course or direction: Traffic was diverted around the scene of the accident. 2. from landfills. * Commitment on the part of the participant to adopt C&D reuse and recycling policies. PROJECT BREAKDOWN In July 2002, in my former role as regional director of the CMRA of Southern California Southern California, also colloquially known as SoCal, is the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Centered on the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego, Southern California is home to nearly 24 million people and is the nation's second most populated region, , I was brought under contract as the grant program consultant. I worked in coordination with William Turley, executive director of CMRA and the associated publisher of Construction Demolition Recycling, which is the grant recipient. Four demolition recycling projects and a technical assistance and training effort have been implemented since the grant program started in July 2002. Claremont Village Claremont Village is a small sub-regional shopping centre located on the corner of Main Road and Box Hill Road, in Claremont, Tasmania. The shopping centre contains a Woolworths supermarket, a Chickenfeed discount store and several speciality shops. Expansion Project--Claremont Village, Calif., is a commercial area that includes restaurants, banking and other small businesses in the city's central business district. The commercial and residential development for Claremont Village Expansion is now underway just west of the existing village area. The expansion program will include a mixed-use development Mixed-use development refers to the practice of allowing more than one type of use in a building or set of buildings. In planning zone terms, this can mean some combination of residential, commercial, industrial, office, institutional, or other land uses. of retail, residential and other uses. From May 2002 to March 2003, the city replaced a roadway, cleared several sites and demolished de·mol·ish tr.v. de·mol·ished, de·mol·ish·ing, de·mol·ish·es 1. To tear down completely; raze. 2. To do away with completely; put an end to. 3. a number of buildings for the expansion program. Property owned by the city was sold to developers for the mixed-use project. Buildings owned by private companies and residents were sold or acquired by Claremont's redevelopment agency under eminent domain eminent domain, the right of a government to force the owner of private property sell it if it is needed for a public use. The right is based on the doctrine that a sovereign state has dominion over all lands and buildings within its borders, which has its origins in proceedings. Because of the large amount of C&D debris that was generated in the Claremont Village Expansion, as well as other criteria that it met, the project was selected for the U.S. EPA C&D Reuse and Recycling Grant program. The Village Expansion project included 35 acres of site clearance and building demolition. In addition, Claremont's Community Services Center and Waste Management Yard will also be demolished and the site will be cleared for the mixed-use development. However, these activities may not take place during the grant period. In addition, a decision has not been made by the city about the demolition of the east end of the citrus citrus Any of the plants that make up the genus Citrus, in the rue family, that yield pulpy fruits covered with fairly thick skins. The genus includes the lemon, lime, sweet and sour oranges, tangerine, grapefruit, citron, and shaddock (C. maxima, or C. grandis; also called pomelo). packing house A packing house is a facility where fruit is received and processed prior to distribution to market. Bulk fruit (such as apples, oranges, pears, and the like) is delivered to the plant via trucks or wagons, where it is dumped into receiving bins and sorted for quality and , which is estimated to be an additional 130,000 square feet. Tons that have been recycled in conjunction with the grant project are detailed in the city of Claremont Village Expansion Recycled Tonnage Data Report. The results are summarized in Table 1 on this page. Target Stores--Target Stores is one of the largest discount retail chain store corporations in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . Because of its significant sales volume, its market share with discount commodities and its prominence prominence /prom·i·nence/ (prom´i-nins) a protrusion or projection. frontonasal prominence in the retail industry, Target is continually con·tin·u·al adj. 1. Recurring regularly or frequently: the continual need to pay the mortgage. 2. expanding its commercial base. Target Stores builds between 100 to 200 stores throughout the United States annually. New stores are constructed either as new stand-alone buildings, using a standardized standardized pertaining to data that have been submitted to standardization procedures. standardized morbidity rate see morbidity rate. standardized mortality rate see mortality rate. architectural design This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please help Wikipedia by adding references. See the for details. This article has been tagged since September 2007. or as renovations of existing buildings. In the case of existing building reuse, the building core of an old retail store is selectively demolished, the exterior is renovated and the store is rebuilt to meet Target's architectural style and commercial theme. Prior to the grant program, Target Stores has had limited success with recycling jobsite C&D debris as a standard practice. Some concrete from new construction and site demolition, metal fixtures from interior renovations and a new program to bale bale 1. a package of wool in a wool pack weighing 150-250 lb depending largely on whether it is greasy or scoured. 2. a compressed bundle of hay, either about 100 lb tied with wire or twine, or large, round, untied bales, as big as a small hay stack and referred to as 'big bales'. cardboard Cardboard is a generic non-specific term for a heavy duty paper based product. Paperboard
Paperboard is a paper based material. It is often used for folding cartons, set-up boxes, carded packaging, etc. generated by construction activities have been recycled at certain project sites. Target Stores joined the grant program to start expanding its C&D recycling activities at sites where C&D recycling centers were available to cost-effectively recycle re·cy·cle tr.v. re·cy·cled, re·cy·cling, re·cy·cles 1. To put or pass through a cycle again, as for further treatment. 2. To start a different cycle in. 3. a. jobsite materials. Incorporation of best management practices (BMPs) and providing a training program for staff and contractor/subcontractors have had the greatest potential to significantly increase diversion of these materials. Eureka Store Demolition Recycling Project--Target Stores purchased a closed Montgomery Wards store site in Eureka, Calif., and demolished the building and cleared the site for a new Target retail store. The approximately 150,000-square-foot-site was located on the northern boundary of the city adjacent to the 101 Freeway. The building area was about 85,000 square feet. Contractor specifications (Section 02060, Building Demolition and Recycling Requirements) were provided to prospective demolition contractors, as well as a Contractor's Solid Waste and Recycling Management Plan and Contractor's Report of Reuse, Recycling and Disposal. I acted as Target's solid waste management and recycling representative under the grant. He attended the job walk on June 17, 2003, and reviewed project recycling requirements, discussed requirements with prospective bidders for the contractor's solid waste and recycling plan and for the contractor's recycling reporting forms. Based on that information, I helped prepare the recycling plan on behalf of Target Stores for project planning project planning - project management purposes. The final Contractor's Solid Waste and Recycling Management Plan was provided by the demolition contractor. Recycling was the preferred option for processing demolition and site debris, because this met with local C&D recycling policy and because it was the most financially feasible option. The local transfer station charged $88 per ton for disposed dis·pose v. dis·posed, dis·pos·ing, dis·pos·es v.tr. 1. To place or set in a particular order; arrange. 2. materials. The closest landfills are located in Medford, Ore., (200 miles each way), or Redding Redding, city (1990 pop. 66,462), seat of Shasta co., N central Calif., on the Sacramento River; inc. 1872. A principal tourist center for a mountain and lake region, it also has lumbering, food-processing, and diverse manufacturing. , Calif., (125 miles each way). Although the tipping fee was lower at the landfill, the transportation cost ($75 per hour each way) was prohibitive pro·hib·i·tive also pro·hib·i·to·ry adj. 1. Prohibiting; forbidding: took prohibitive measures. 2. . Materials could be recycled onsite or offsite for a much lower cost per ton (estimated to be less than $10 per ton). Concrete, asphalt asphalt (ăs`fôlt, –fălt), brownish-black substance used commonly in road making, roofing, and waterproofing. Chemically, it is a natural mixture of hydrocarbons. and concrete block comprised the majority of debris onsite, and they were either crushed and reused onsite or taken offsite for crushing crushing deaths of newborn animals, especially those in litters, caused by the mother lying on them accidentally. Contributed to by weakness of the neonate or awkward accommodation. A problem in piglets and puppies. Called also overlying. . Scrap metal, wire, conduit conduit /con·du·it/ (kon´doo-it) channel. ileal conduit the surgical anastomosis of the ureters to one end of a detached segment of ileum, the other end being used to form a stoma on the and cable were collected onsite in 40-cubic-yard roll-off containers and taken to a local scrap recycling facility. The building contains both painted and non-painted wood. The non-painted materials were recovered. Materials that could not be source separated because of economic or operational factors were disposed of at a local transfer station or taken to landfills. Other disposed material such as drywall (or debris that cannot be included in miscellaneous debris loads because they contain no recyclables) were taken to the local transfer station. The transfer station makes the decision on which landfill to use, depending on the lowest transportation cost and tipping fee. The results of the site and building demolition are summarized in Table 2 on page 54. Target Stores--Boston South-bay Demolition Recycling Project--As a follow up to the Eureka project, Target Stores coordinated C&D recycling for another property located in the Dorchester, Mass., area. This building was an existing K-Mart, which was renovated for a new Target retail store. The project architect, Peterson Griffin Architects, adopted Section 02060, Building Demolition and Recycling Requirements, and Sections 02060A, Contractor's Solid Waste and Recycling Plan, and 02060B, Contractor's Report of Reuse, Recycling, and Disposal as part of the demolition documents. The contractor, Jeffrey M. Brown Associates, selected a demolition subcontractor, and the work began on July 2, 2003. The demolition subcontractor used a large mixed C&D recycling facility to process the debris, but it was not able to meet the 75 percent diversion requirements of the grant because the selective interior demolition debris could not be separated for recycling. Nonetheless, recycling activities were tracked for the grant program. The contractor has provided a Solid Waste and Recycling Plan and Contractor's report of demolition recycling activities as summarized in Table 3 on this page. PROJECT RESULTS One of the goals of the grant program is to implement C&D recycling on major projects that do not otherwise recycle C&D materials or on projects where innovative technologies can be developed to expand current C&D recycling practices. The following are some highlights of project results that were achieved beyond the baseline C&D recycling practices of the participants: City of Claremont: The city implemented Section 02060 building demolition specifications for the Village Expansion Project, which included contractor requirements to provide a solid waste and recycling management plan and a report of recycling and disposal in conjunction with the building-demolition and site clearance contracts. Previously, the city did have a C&D reporting requirement in place for all haulers that dispose Dispose is design pattern which is used to handle resource clean up in systems which use garbage collection. See also
The city reviewed a draft C&D recycling ordinance that I helped prepared, which would require 75 percent C&D diversion rates, SWM SWM Silent Wave Motor (Nikon) SWM Stadtwerke München GmbH (German: municipality utility company) SWM Solid Waste Management SWM Single White Male SWM Small Window Manager SWM Stay With Me + recycling plans and reporting by all commercial and industrial generators (residential and multifamily would be excluded). The city anticipated at that time that a C&D ordinance would be required under California's new state law, SB 1374. However, that law was modified by legislature to require only certain localities to comply with a model C&D recycling ordinance as directed by the state's waste board. Instead, the city modified the ordinance as an internal requirement for all of its public works public works pl.n. Construction projects, such as highways or dams, financed by public funds and constructed by a government for the benefit or use of the general public. Noun 1. projects. The city coordinated the C&D recycling program beyond the Village Expansion. All new C&D recycling projects will have a 75 percent diversion rate and be required to report diversion using the city's reporting format. The C&D program was expanded to the Claremont Colleges Claremont Colleges, at Claremont, Calif.; including five liberal arts and sciences colleges and two graduate schools; founded 1925, known until 1961 as the Associated Colleges at Claremont. Their history began with Pomona College (inc. , which includes 10 major campuses within the city. The Pomona College Pomona College: see Claremont Colleges. implemented the C&D recycling requirements, SWM + recycling plan and reporting forms on a new life sciences building that will obtain a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design The Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Green Building Rating System, developed by the U.S. Green Building Council, provides a suite of standards for environmentally sustainable construction. (LEED) rating from the U.S. Green Building Council. Target Stores: At the beginning of the project, Target Stores had little or no organized C&D recycling for demolition of buildings for new stores or for building renovation/selective demolition projects. C&D recycling was conducted whenever local facilities were available and contractors elected to recycle. The pilot C&D recycling projects for the Eureka and Southbay stores have implemented the following new best management practices for C&D recycling: * A set recycling rate of 75 percent diversion for C&D debris; * Training of contractors and demolition subcontractors on the grant program and C&D recycling and documentation requirements; * Incorporation of C&D recycling specifications Section 02060--SolidWaste and Recycling requirements in the project bid documents; * Use of Section 02060A--Contractor's Solid Waste and Recycling Management Plans, which contractors are require to submit prior m the start of work, for approval by Target and myself; and Use of Section 02060B--Contractor's Report of Recycling and Disposal, to document C&D processes incorporated (i.e. source separation or mixed debris recycling) and types of materials diverted by tons. As a result of the success of the Target pilot projects, a program can be incorporated for C&D recycling on future projects where C&D recycling facilities exist and recycling can be achieved within the contract sum and schedule. In addition, other large corporations that have major capitol Capitol, seat of the U.S. Congress Capitol, seat of the U.S. government at Washington, D.C. It is the city's dominating monument, built on an elevated site that was chosen by George Washington in consultation with Major Pierre L'Enfant. development programs can follow suit based on Target's success. It is not dear whether a Corporate Policy, BMPs or contractor specifications for C&D recycling will be implemented by the grant participants on a long-term basis. Follow up with the grant participants is highly recommended. C&DR The author is principal of KMI KMI Kerrigan Media International, Inc. KMI Koninklijk Meteorologisch Instituut KMI Key Management Infrastructure KMI Knowledge Management Institute (George Washington University) KMI Keep Me Informed Building, Associates, Glendale, Calif, and can be contacted at kmibuildinginc@earth/ink, net or (818) 548-8996.
Table 1: City of Claremont--Village Expansion Summary of C&D
Materials Recycled and Disposed Sept. 16, 2002--March 10, 2003
Per City of Claremont, Calif.
Material Type Recyclability & Process Estimated
Tons
Recycled
Asphalt Crush/recycle onsite 411
Concrete Crush/recycle onsite 4,949
Scrap Metal & fixtures Source separate & recycle offsite 270
Lumber Sale to Mexico 122
Miscellaneous Demo Debris Process offsite for recovery 0
Recycled
Recycled Materials 5,752
Disposed Materials
Total Tons Generated
Recycling Rate 83.37 percent
Material Type Estimated Tons
Total
Disposed Generated
Asphalt 0 411
Concrete 0 4,949
Scrap Metal & fixtures 0 270
Lumber 0 122
Miscellaneous Demo Debris 1,147 1,147
Total
Disposed Generated
Recycled Materials
Disposed Materials 1,147
Total Tons Generated 6,899
Recycling Rate
Table 2: Target Eureka Store-Montgomery Wards Demolition and
Solid Waste and Recycling Data--Final Report Per Kernen
Construction, Eureka, Calif.
Demolition Debris
Material Type Potential Recyclability & Process Tons
Recycled
Asphalt/Concrete Crush/recycle onsite/offsite 11,019
Concrete Block (CMU) Crush/recycle onsite/offsite
Scrap Metal & Fixtures Source separate & recycle offsite 168
Wood (non-painted/treated) Source separate & recycle offsite 125
Acoustic Ceiling Tiles Remove for reuse off site
Miscellaneous Demo Debris Process off site for recovery
Tonnage Summary
Recycled Disposed
Recycled Materials 11,312
Disposed Materials 1,225
Total Tons Generated
Recycling Rate 90.23 percent
Demolition Debris
Material Type C&D Facility
Disposed
Asphalt/Concrete 0 Kernen Construction
Concrete Block (CMU) 0 Kernen Construction
Scrap Metal & Fixtures 0 Arcata Recycling
Wood (non-painted/treated) 0 Arcata Recycling
Acoustic Ceiling Tiles Arcata Recycling
Miscellaneous Demo Debris 1,225 Arcata Recycling
Tonnage Summary
Total Generated
Recycled Materials
Disposed Materials
Total Tons Generated 12,531
Recycling Rate
Table 3: Target Store-Boston Southbay Interior Demolition and
Site Clearance Preliminary Solid Waste and Recycling Report
Per Jeffrey M. Brown Associates Inc. Boston *
Building Demolition Debris (Selective Demolition)
Material Type Potential Recyclability & Process Est. Tons
Recycle
Concrete Crush/recycle offsite 451
Scrap Metal & Fixtures Source separate & recycle offsite 253
Miscellaneous Demo Debris Process off site for recovery
Recycled Disposed
Recycled Materials 704
Disposed Materials 2,400
Total Tons Generated
Recycling Rate 22.68 percent
Building Demolition Debris (Selective Demolition)
Material Type Potential C&D Facility
Dispose
Concrete 0 Fed Corp/Durham
Scrap Metal & Fixtures 0 Brockton Recovery
Miscellaneous Demo Debris 2,400 Pond View Recycling
Total
Generated
Recycled Materials
Disposed Materials
Total Tons Generated 3,104
Recycling Rate
* Reported by J.M. Brown in cubic yards and converted to tons by
Ingalls Inc. using standard conversion factors.
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